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Jan 7, 2013
01/13
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CNBC
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the regulatory environment is more honerous today than it has been in decades. at the end of 2012, s andp
the regulatory environment is more honerous today than it has been in decades. at the end of 2012, s andp
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Jun 24, 2013
06/13
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CNBC
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we look at that 50% threshold as a capitulant environment. here you see the average, still some room to come down. we are getting close. >> pete, you have been in the financials trade, it's still not convincing to you at this point? >> no, it's not. i have been back in the financials since back in november. we have seen the activity telling us they were going to go higher. they did. as soon as we hit the end of may, it was like a switch was turned off. we've watched this slow pullback. so i'm just curious, at what point do you think they were at a full breakdown? is it the 100 day, the 200-day, is there a point where you would be less bullish? >> time is part of it as well. would be a big part of it. look, we still had breakouts. even friday, we had three breakouts in financials. schwab looks good to me. some of the asset managers look good. some of the regional banks look good. financials have held up. that's important. if they break down on a relative basis, then we have a problem we tracked the region also, they were doing well. karen, whe
we look at that 50% threshold as a capitulant environment. here you see the average, still some room to come down. we are getting close. >> pete, you have been in the financials trade, it's still not convincing to you at this point? >> no, it's not. i have been back in the financials since back in november. we have seen the activity telling us they were going to go higher. they did. as soon as we hit the end of may, it was like a switch was turned off. we've watched this slow...
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Jun 25, 2013
06/13
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CNBC
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right now all we have is high liquidity environment with low growth. if u.s. data is where they are and the payroll data getting ready to have serious volatility in these numbers and to the high side, this is where you start to get excited about growth. no. good data is good and i think we're adjusting how the fed does in emerging markets. >> you know what's going on in brazil and china. those are big growth engines. those countries are slowing down. doesn't that have impact on the u.s.? from where i sit as a global macro guy, i'm looking at a world slowing down not speeding up and you're looking at rates for the bad news not the good. >> the point for the u.s. is the u.s. isn't relying on exporting economy like china is. >> yields continue go up and choke off the recovery. >> that's a different story. >> you think 2.6, 2.7% will choke off recovery. >> if money starts flowing out of china on the margin, they won't buy as many treasuryius. then you have federal reserve buying as many treasuries, not 2.6, much higher yields over the next six months or? no. if th
right now all we have is high liquidity environment with low growth. if u.s. data is where they are and the payroll data getting ready to have serious volatility in these numbers and to the high side, this is where you start to get excited about growth. no. good data is good and i think we're adjusting how the fed does in emerging markets. >> you know what's going on in brazil and china. those are big growth engines. those countries are slowing down. doesn't that have impact on the u.s.?...
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Jan 17, 2013
01/13
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MSNBC
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you just can't ignore the interplay between biology and environment. >> what about the fact that we talk about the irish or the native american indians. is it a lack of tolerance? is there a term for it? >> no, no, no. there's a genetic factor and an environmental factor. but the bottom line is we know how to deal with this. prevention, prevention, prevention. nine out of ten addicts started when they were teenagers. if the brain is still developing and you hijack it, you're permanently -- >> you don't like these laws legalizing marijuana? >> no, i don't. i think we need the public health community to weigh in here. so we need to be mindful, and not jump into this. >> like joe camel and that kind of stuff. >> exactly. liquor stores. liquor stores are places where people are going to abuse liquor and have easy access. >> this is too hot. the hottest topic in this country right now is gun safety. your family has been victimized. because of your family being victims, we are all victims. what is your feeling? >> it's not just the person that's killed, like my uncles. it's the whole family. s
you just can't ignore the interplay between biology and environment. >> what about the fact that we talk about the irish or the native american indians. is it a lack of tolerance? is there a term for it? >> no, no, no. there's a genetic factor and an environmental factor. but the bottom line is we know how to deal with this. prevention, prevention, prevention. nine out of ten addicts started when they were teenagers. if the brain is still developing and you hijack it, you're...
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Nov 11, 2013
11/13
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CNBC
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>> well, there's no doubt that the regulatory environment has changed. i don't think it's ever going back. it's had a big impact on us because, of course, we're under the federal reserve's oversight. i would categorize what the federal reserve is doing is there's many positives. they're looking to reduce overall risk within the company. they're looking to identify areas of risk that maybe hadn't been previously identified or addressed or oversight quite as much as they could have been. at the same time, we have to be careful because there is a point of overkill. and the fed is working hard to try to find the balance point. i'm grateful for much of what they're doing. at the same sometime, have i to do trade-offs. regulators rarely work in a world of trade-offs. >> great to have you on the program. >> thanks so much for cnbc's participate participation in impact. >> we love being here. good luck with the rest of the conference. walt bettinger joining us, ceo at schwab. "closing bell" tomorrow we'll round up a lively group of main street investors who will
>> well, there's no doubt that the regulatory environment has changed. i don't think it's ever going back. it's had a big impact on us because, of course, we're under the federal reserve's oversight. i would categorize what the federal reserve is doing is there's many positives. they're looking to reduce overall risk within the company. they're looking to identify areas of risk that maybe hadn't been previously identified or addressed or oversight quite as much as they could have been. at...
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Jul 12, 2013
07/13
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CNBC
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. >> let's talk about the regulatory environment. now, senator elizabeth warren and john mccain want to bring back glass steegle. let's see what senator warren told cnbc about that bill. >> the central premise behind 21st century glad steegal, if you want to get out there and take risks, go and do it. but what you can't do is you can't get access to fdic insured deposits when you do. >> should the fire wall between insured deposits and money put at risk by investment banking be put back up again? >> well, i'm a little bit confused by the whole -- the whole idea, because this is a fire wall that exists todayment we can't take insured deposits and move them over to our investment banking business. that's just not the way it works. it's a separate subsidiary of the holding company, which is separate from our bank. we think that the banks today are much safer, because they're diversified. we think wells fargo is safer today than it was four years ago and ten years ago, because we're a larger, more diversified company. one of the business
. >> let's talk about the regulatory environment. now, senator elizabeth warren and john mccain want to bring back glass steegle. let's see what senator warren told cnbc about that bill. >> the central premise behind 21st century glad steegal, if you want to get out there and take risks, go and do it. but what you can't do is you can't get access to fdic insured deposits when you do. >> should the fire wall between insured deposits and money put at risk by investment banking...
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527
Aug 20, 2013
08/13
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CNBC
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will this ps4 be able to compete in this mobile environment? we expect to see a big battle for the living room on the internet this season. we just saw tivo coming out with new boxes this morning. we have the ceo on "squawk on the street" talking. but tretton says sony is ready for all of that. listen. >> i realize that we're competing for people's free time, and we realize we're competing for the entertainment dollar. i'm feeling pretty good about where we sit. i don't think our technology or entertainment experience is in danger. i think it's leading that migration. >> reporter: and over the top, all of the different things, are definitely going to play into this, especially since some of the games are costing $50 or $60, after you buy the $400 console. but tretton says the quality of entertainment is going to be worth the money. we'll see if consumers agree this holiday season. maria. >> all right, jon, thank you so much. >>> apple's hiring of high-end fashion house yves st. laurent and the guru behind nike's fuel ban is pushing into wearabl
will this ps4 be able to compete in this mobile environment? we expect to see a big battle for the living room on the internet this season. we just saw tivo coming out with new boxes this morning. we have the ceo on "squawk on the street" talking. but tretton says sony is ready for all of that. listen. >> i realize that we're competing for people's free time, and we realize we're competing for the entertainment dollar. i'm feeling pretty good about where we sit. i don't think...
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Sep 13, 2013
09/13
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CNBC
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it-d that take away from the business environment and demand because some customers were worried. in the process they're not going to wait around while this process is around. they're going to move to your competitor. how much was this public battle in terms of impacting business? >> let me take this opportunity to thank our customers by not being too distracted by it. there was some distraction, for sure. the team at dell did a great job staying very, very focused. in the last quarter, our enterprise business solution grew 9%. one of our principle competitors also had a 9% change in their business, but in their case it was negative. we're playing offense. we're on the attack. we're growing, expanding our share. this is the dell that, you know, many of you are very, very familiar with. and you're going to see it in all of its glory. >> absolutely. let me ask you about that enterprise business because you said revamping the enterprise computing services business in the mold of ibm is a complex undertaking and best performed outside of the spotlight. i get that. doing it as a privat
it-d that take away from the business environment and demand because some customers were worried. in the process they're not going to wait around while this process is around. they're going to move to your competitor. how much was this public battle in terms of impacting business? >> let me take this opportunity to thank our customers by not being too distracted by it. there was some distraction, for sure. the team at dell did a great job staying very, very focused. in the last quarter,...
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Jun 25, 2013
06/13
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CNBC
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we're certainly not back to a normal interest rate environment. we've got a long way to go before we get there. >> you have 12.5% in private equity. what are the alternatives you expose yourself to away from stocks? >> both of those are very large, mature portfolios. we're going to be a steady-state investor. real estate is a bifurcated market. there are some cities on the east coast, west coast, back to '07 price levels. that's a concern to me. >> you think they're getting away from you? they're -- >> well, we're going to take profits in some areas. and we're going to really focus in on core assets that are yield producing. steady rents, steady cash flow. we need that stability given the volatility in the rest of the portfolio. >> yeah. >> i noticed in the pie chart, 54% global equity. i don't know -- take the u.s. out of that and take us overs s overseas. you know, we've noticed lately that the turmoil in markets like brazil, of course china, and now greece again. you know. you're seeing this tug of war that's going on in many countries, and the
we're certainly not back to a normal interest rate environment. we've got a long way to go before we get there. >> you have 12.5% in private equity. what are the alternatives you expose yourself to away from stocks? >> both of those are very large, mature portfolios. we're going to be a steady-state investor. real estate is a bifurcated market. there are some cities on the east coast, west coast, back to '07 price levels. that's a concern to me. >> you think they're getting...
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Jun 20, 2013
06/13
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MSNBCW
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i guess they're interested on the environment. pressing him on what to about the issues. he's responding talking about what an unpopular action it might be to take steps on his own. >> you have the keystone thing in there. the expectation, i don't have any real intelligence from the white house. the expectation you hear as well as i do, he will end up approving the keystone pipeline. part of it is tempering the expectations of his base and saying, you don't want the keystone pipeline, you want me taking action on climate change. i think that might be part of laying out the political risks for them. also, i think there's a risk of -- there might be a possibility of overstating the political risk of all this too, if he takes the executive actions we're hearing about now, what are you going to have. obama's divisive, radical, he's refusing to work with us, he's engaged in a job killing war on coal. you're going to hear everything you heard since the day he became president. it's been effective to a point. there are states and parts of the country that are off limits to obama
i guess they're interested on the environment. pressing him on what to about the issues. he's responding talking about what an unpopular action it might be to take steps on his own. >> you have the keystone thing in there. the expectation, i don't have any real intelligence from the white house. the expectation you hear as well as i do, he will end up approving the keystone pipeline. part of it is tempering the expectations of his base and saying, you don't want the keystone pipeline, you...
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Jun 20, 2013
06/13
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CNBC
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basically, in a rising rate environment, banks sufrt worst. they collectively fall 3.8% over three-month period in a rising-rate climate. i think there are three reasons. one, because of the net interest margins that is where we borrow short and lend long. also, banks own a lot of bonds. we know what is going to happen as far as bond values go. when rates go higher. also i just think more in the present here, if there's a sector right now that's due to kul of cool off, it is the banking stocks. >> rerecently jamie dimon said they would make 200 million on every basis point in moves. >> that, the logical point. but up is down, down is up. and i think it is a difficult calculus that things have to use here to navigate their way through. it is probably a pretty nasty mine field ahead. >> jeff, stay here. not everyone agrees with your point of view. >> joining us to make his case and why rising rates are positive for banks. brendon hawkin of ubs, what do you think of jeff's reasoning and traditional reasoning says a steeper yield curve is better f
basically, in a rising rate environment, banks sufrt worst. they collectively fall 3.8% over three-month period in a rising-rate climate. i think there are three reasons. one, because of the net interest margins that is where we borrow short and lend long. also, banks own a lot of bonds. we know what is going to happen as far as bond values go. when rates go higher. also i just think more in the present here, if there's a sector right now that's due to kul of cool off, it is the banking stocks....
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Nov 22, 2013
11/13
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CNBC
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the fact, electronics, best buy should do well in this environment. i think the fact is, again, look althou at multiples for the market, 15 1/2 times forward 12-month earnings. start of this year we were at 13 1/2 times earning. in terms of a bubble, we're not expansive. things are reasonably valued where we stand. >> ann, i'm going to ask what sounds like a naive question, maybe even a dumb one, but when we talk -- are we overthinking fundamentals when it comes to the stock market? isn't the only thing we need to know right now is that the fed is going to keep quantitative easing coming? >> well, bill, we know it's going to end at some point. it's been going on for an awful long time. i'm kind of looking forward to see what happens when we have to live on our own. and when that happens, hopefully the strength we're seeing in the market today and at the company level, too, that will start to show. we see it. i've been to -- i've been meeting with ceos, numerous traveling over the last month. what i'm hearing is positive. i mean, for the most part. it'
the fact, electronics, best buy should do well in this environment. i think the fact is, again, look althou at multiples for the market, 15 1/2 times forward 12-month earnings. start of this year we were at 13 1/2 times earning. in terms of a bubble, we're not expansive. things are reasonably valued where we stand. >> ann, i'm going to ask what sounds like a naive question, maybe even a dumb one, but when we talk -- are we overthinking fundamentals when it comes to the stock market? isn't...
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Jan 18, 2013
01/13
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MSNBC
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you can't ignore the complex interplay between biology and environment when it comes to this illness. >> what about the ethnic factor? we always talk about the irish or the native american indians. is it lack of tolerance? what's the terms? is there a term for it? is there legacy? >> no, no, no. there's a genetic factor and there's an environmental factor. but the bottom line is we know how to deal with this. prevention, prevention, preen. nine out of ten addicts started when they were teenagers. if the brain is still developing and you hijack it with the use of experimentation of marijuana, drugs, you're -- >> you don't like these laws legalizing marijuana. >> no, i don't. i think we need the public health community to be -- weigh in here because we already know what the liquor industry and the tobacco industry have done to our country in targeting kids. and so we need to be mindful and not rush into this -- >> like joe camel, that kind of stuff. >> exactly. joe camel. liquor stores are in places where you know that there are people who are going to abuse liquor and are going to have
you can't ignore the complex interplay between biology and environment when it comes to this illness. >> what about the ethnic factor? we always talk about the irish or the native american indians. is it lack of tolerance? what's the terms? is there a term for it? is there legacy? >> no, no, no. there's a genetic factor and there's an environmental factor. but the bottom line is we know how to deal with this. prevention, prevention, preen. nine out of ten addicts started when they...
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Dec 3, 2013
12/13
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CNBC
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so, in that kind of an environment, 8% to 10% is not at all unreasonable. price earnings ratio, 16.3. we're looking at forward earnings below that. we can continue to see a little expansion on multiples. a little expansion on earnings over this year. and with the dividends, 8% to 10% organically is reasonable to expect for 2014. where we expect a lot more -- or could expect a lot more would be in places like japan where the margins are much lower, corporate profit margins in the united states so as growth increases, we can really see that leveraging up in earnings. we can see something similar to that in europe. so, we may very well see earnings north of -- equity market performance north of 8 % in both europe and japan. >> from your lips to the market god's ears. anthony, good to see you. thank you. >> same here. >> see you later. heading toward the close. we've got 17 minutes left in the trading session. actually, coming off the low a little bit here. down 118 points on the dow right now. >> actually it was last december, i think, if you went back, this p
so, in that kind of an environment, 8% to 10% is not at all unreasonable. price earnings ratio, 16.3. we're looking at forward earnings below that. we can continue to see a little expansion on multiples. a little expansion on earnings over this year. and with the dividends, 8% to 10% organically is reasonable to expect for 2014. where we expect a lot more -- or could expect a lot more would be in places like japan where the margins are much lower, corporate profit margins in the united states...
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Aug 21, 2013
08/13
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CNBC
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that is not necessarily bearish in this environment. and i think some people, it's part of the reason why we saw the markets move up right here. one of the things that helped the markets, interest rate-sensitive groups here, the banks had a nice move to the upside. there's bank of america, helped the overall averages. the dow jones industrials in particular moving up here. guys, i think it would be a bullish signal if we could end in anywhere near positive territory. it's a signal the market is getting more comfortable with tapering, and whether the timing is dramatic in september or december, i'm not sure it makes an awful lot of difference. i go with the tapering-light idea. that makes sense to me. back to you. >> all right, bob, thank you so much. >>> joining us now in our "closing bell exchange" is mark, david, doug from ing, and ben willis from albert freed & company. good to see everybody. thank you for joining us. let's talk the markets. first off, what a wild -- what a wild reaction, ben. talk to us about what went on down here
that is not necessarily bearish in this environment. and i think some people, it's part of the reason why we saw the markets move up right here. one of the things that helped the markets, interest rate-sensitive groups here, the banks had a nice move to the upside. there's bank of america, helped the overall averages. the dow jones industrials in particular moving up here. guys, i think it would be a bullish signal if we could end in anywhere near positive territory. it's a signal the market is...
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734
Mar 6, 2013
03/13
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CNBC
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we need to protect their environment. we have a strict quarantine system to protect the integrity of the environment. forty years on, it's still a class-a nature reserve. it's our job to look after them. ...it's my job to look after it. ♪ >>> welcome back to the cnbc special report. "dow all time high". >> the thing that you can say is that if you had been climbing this wall of worry, it may have brought us to this position right now. if these real worries that are going to bring this airplane or is this minor turbulance. some of the things that the people have put out there for us. for example, the slow earnings momentum. the earnings have been there but the revenue hasn't as well. >> you are right. remember, going into the last earnings season. it has been ratcheted down significantly. but the american companiy ies managed to beat those lower expectations. and then you have here in this corner lower volume. we have been able to get to the highs with the low volume. >> sometimes it feels like there is two people tradin
we need to protect their environment. we have a strict quarantine system to protect the integrity of the environment. forty years on, it's still a class-a nature reserve. it's our job to look after them. ...it's my job to look after it. ♪ >>> welcome back to the cnbc special report. "dow all time high". >> the thing that you can say is that if you had been climbing this wall of worry, it may have brought us to this position right now. if these real worries that are...
588
588
Jul 15, 2013
07/13
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CNBC
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eye 588
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you need to know what to do with your money in a changing environment. that's what i'm looking forward to finding out. in today's markets, a lot can happen in a second. with fidelity's guaranteed one-second trade execution, we route your order to up to 75 market centers to look for the best possible price -- maybe even better than you expected. it's all part of our goal to execute your trade in one second. i'm derrick chan of fidelity investments. our one-second trade execution is one more innovative reason serious investors are choosing fidelity. now get 200 free trades you open an account. ♪ ♪ [ male announcer ] some things are designed to draw crowds. ♪ ♪ others are designed to leave them behind. ♪ the all-new 2014 lexus is. it's your move. >>> welcome back. next time you walk through the doors of your favorite store, your every mav, from the aisles you visit to the time you spend there, to what you end up buying, could be tracked by that store. is it an invasion of privacy? joining me right now is todd hazel hazelton, and this is on the sto
you need to know what to do with your money in a changing environment. that's what i'm looking forward to finding out. in today's markets, a lot can happen in a second. with fidelity's guaranteed one-second trade execution, we route your order to up to 75 market centers to look for the best possible price -- maybe even better than you expected. it's all part of our goal to execute your trade in one second. i'm derrick chan of fidelity investments. our one-second trade execution is one more...
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36
Jun 20, 2013
06/13
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CNBC
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eye 36
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the environment gets tougher for money managers. does it come back? yeah, i think it does. >> let's bring in steve liesman. he was at the fed news conference yesterday, has been following it all. steve, what do you make of what the traders have to say? are they getting it right? are the markets getting it right? >> can we do a wide shot on the traders? i need to do a survey. this is very important to me. here we go. nice. these guys are so quick in the back room there. quais, raise your hand if you got new information yesterday from bernanke from what you previously thought on the trajectory of fed policy over the next year. >> nobody raises their hand. >> it didn't come from bernanke. it came from the market itself. >> now, guys, could you put up the fed survey chart that i had. the cnbc fed survey. what did bernanke say yesterday? tapering towards the earned of the year, he said ending qe middle of next year, hiking the funds rate sometime thereafter. that's the fed survey and that's what bernanke said. i'm not sure what's going on. i think you want
the environment gets tougher for money managers. does it come back? yeah, i think it does. >> let's bring in steve liesman. he was at the fed news conference yesterday, has been following it all. steve, what do you make of what the traders have to say? are they getting it right? are the markets getting it right? >> can we do a wide shot on the traders? i need to do a survey. this is very important to me. here we go. nice. these guys are so quick in the back room there. quais, raise...
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Nov 21, 2013
11/13
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CSPAN2
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transparent economic environment and a liberal political environment that respects the universal rights and freedoms of all. achieving that future will necessarily be the sustained work of successive administrations. in the near term, president obama will continue to lay the critical foundations for lasting progress in four key areas, enhancing security, expanding prosperity, fostering democratic values and advancing human dignity. let me begin with security, which is the underpinning of all progress in every region. we are making the asia-pacific more secure with american alliances and an american force posture that are being modernized to meet the challenges of our time. i 2020, 60% of our fleet will be based in the pacific and our pacific command will gain more of our most cutting-edge capabilities. as we are seeing in the philippines today, our military presence in the region is vital not only to deter threats and defend allies but also to provide humanitarian assistance and unmatched disaster response. we are updating and diversifying our security relationships in the region to add
transparent economic environment and a liberal political environment that respects the universal rights and freedoms of all. achieving that future will necessarily be the sustained work of successive administrations. in the near term, president obama will continue to lay the critical foundations for lasting progress in four key areas, enhancing security, expanding prosperity, fostering democratic values and advancing human dignity. let me begin with security, which is the underpinning of all...
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Dec 7, 2013
12/13
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KCSM
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they all take the environment. in part because they open the door to poachers. heavily armed brigades the rangers are on patrol and its tributary of the congo river looking for poachers. they are stationed in the central african republic beatrix potter a cross border force protection project run by the central african republic cameron and the republic of congo. patrol on sunday river on the right hand side of the central african republic nonetheless his camera. this is all part of the tri national protected area the green nature taking its august on to a forest reserve in the central african republic. the country was plunged into chaos following a military coup and coaches take advantage of that the stand that that is the director of design concerned the park he says the death toll among the animals was high why didn't the second of all the people who live there based on what we observe them as argus on the reserve the whole thing was well organized it. when mike poachers presumably from sudan. they protect the site of a clearing in early may it all. what made i
they all take the environment. in part because they open the door to poachers. heavily armed brigades the rangers are on patrol and its tributary of the congo river looking for poachers. they are stationed in the central african republic beatrix potter a cross border force protection project run by the central african republic cameron and the republic of congo. patrol on sunday river on the right hand side of the central african republic nonetheless his camera. this is all part of the tri...
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543
May 24, 2013
05/13
by
CNBC
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eye 543
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they say -- too late, too little, and they say invest too conservatively to ever have enough for environment. so getting good advice is fine. but i think you have to structure how you're paying, how you're going to pay for it. you can go to an adviser, you can sit down, you can explain your needs, your desires, and what your situation is. and they can do your allocation once a year and it will cost you for an hour of time. >> you know, already, in a 401(k), you've got your custodial fees. so there's one hurdle you'd have to overcome to actually make a profit in your 401(k) in terms of performance. now i'm going to add a management fee on top of that. that just adds more and more expenses to a plan that i'm, frankly, not paying that much attention to anyway. >> it does. investors need to always tally up all of the fees that they're paying, and they will be a drag, from the gross performance of the account. a middle ground for the 401(k) investor would be to find a really great balanced mutual fund. and there's funds out there that have 30, 50, 70-year track records. this is where the manager
they say -- too late, too little, and they say invest too conservatively to ever have enough for environment. so getting good advice is fine. but i think you have to structure how you're paying, how you're going to pay for it. you can go to an adviser, you can sit down, you can explain your needs, your desires, and what your situation is. and they can do your allocation once a year and it will cost you for an hour of time. >> you know, already, in a 401(k), you've got your custodial fees....
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May 23, 2013
05/13
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CNBC
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estimate, which is actually a low for this interest rate environment. so i think his comments are wrong. >> well, i mean, the truth is, they are similar policies, though. i recognized that japan has been faster and more furious on the up side. 83% since the november lows. but we're still talking about similar economics. the central bank pumping money into the system. so would you believe in a buy on the dip mentality in japan, and do you believe in the buy on the dip mentality here, going forward, given the fact at some point the market is just going to anticipate the tapering off will begin and they're going to get in front of it. you know that? >> absolutely. i think that the last time that we did this, you know, in 2010, it was a rip the band-aid off scenario and the market did not like it. i think the fed has learned from the two times previously that they're not going to rip the band-aid off a third time. with that in mind, again, you have instant corporate buyback activity. the economic data is improving. at the end of 2010, housing was still an i
estimate, which is actually a low for this interest rate environment. so i think his comments are wrong. >> well, i mean, the truth is, they are similar policies, though. i recognized that japan has been faster and more furious on the up side. 83% since the november lows. but we're still talking about similar economics. the central bank pumping money into the system. so would you believe in a buy on the dip mentality in japan, and do you believe in the buy on the dip mentality here, going...
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Apr 2, 2013
04/13
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and a low interest rates environment means that the banks are going to do well and make a lot of money. and finally, we like the cheap, the low-price energy, because units that use energy are going to do well. so there are certainly good areas to invest in. >> rick santelli, what do you make of all that? give me your sense of the bond market as a viable investment right here. >> well, i'll tell you what, my hats off to frank james. because i will tell you that no matter what your view on stocks is, and i believe that stocks will most likely keep going up. i've never advocated selling. but i do advocate, pay attention to why it's going up. and as frank pointed out, consider what a good hedge against any slippage of magnitude in stocks would be. think 1987, even though i don't think we'll have that kind of correction. it's that they're going to run out of equities and buy treasuries. we're at 186 in the ten-year, close to the lowest yield since the third week in january. but at one point, the record low yield was under 140. technically, we could trade 1% of stocks. so to paint one pictur
and a low interest rates environment means that the banks are going to do well and make a lot of money. and finally, we like the cheap, the low-price energy, because units that use energy are going to do well. so there are certainly good areas to invest in. >> rick santelli, what do you make of all that? give me your sense of the bond market as a viable investment right here. >> well, i'll tell you what, my hats off to frank james. because i will tell you that no matter what your...
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Aug 20, 2013
08/13
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what do i buy in a higher-rate environment, jeremy? >> we like taking advantage of buying the regional banks off the back of higher net interest margins, and also short the homebuilders. we think that makes a lot of sense. if rates are going to continue to rise in a linear fashion. but they might not. >> gentlemen, thank you very much. >> thank you. we're losing altitude here. >> big time. >> quickly as we head toward the close. we'll see whether we can finish positive or not when we come back for the "closing countdown." >> join us for the cypress interview. t.j. rodgers is with us, defending his op ed. it raised eyebrows about how targeting the rich only ends up hurting middle and lower-income americans. t.j. rodgers is with us coming up. at a dry cleaner, we replaced people with a machine. what? customers didn't like it. so why do banks do it? hello? hello?! if your bank doesn't let you talk to a real person 24/7, you need an ally. hello? ally bank. your money needs an ally. a quarter million tweeters is beare tweeting. and 900 mill
what do i buy in a higher-rate environment, jeremy? >> we like taking advantage of buying the regional banks off the back of higher net interest margins, and also short the homebuilders. we think that makes a lot of sense. if rates are going to continue to rise in a linear fashion. but they might not. >> gentlemen, thank you very much. >> thank you. we're losing altitude here. >> big time. >> quickly as we head toward the close. we'll see whether we can finish...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Jan 22, 2013
01/13
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SFGTV2
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we have got to give them a transparent environment to make the decision in. >> still another quarter, which indicates the enormous range of the subject matter, arbitration. is it a legitimate part of the legal system, or is it just a private system of justice? >> both. it is both. it is a private system of justice. unfortunately, it is only available very often to people who have money. again, what we call the rent-a- judge system exists today. you have retired judges you can hire four between $500.1000 dollars an hour to adjudicate your case -- hire for between five under dollars and -- 5 hundred dollars -- $500 and $1000 an hour to adjudicator case. there is foreclosure. the supreme court said we need mandatory mediation before trial to try and do away with the logjam we have. mediation is a very useful and efficient way of handling some cases. many cases. it is part of the future of the practice of law. they can be the only part of the practice of law that we use to resolve disputes. >> 30 minutes to go. we are in good shape. i have not been aware of how the time works here. i am l
we have got to give them a transparent environment to make the decision in. >> still another quarter, which indicates the enormous range of the subject matter, arbitration. is it a legitimate part of the legal system, or is it just a private system of justice? >> both. it is both. it is a private system of justice. unfortunately, it is only available very often to people who have money. again, what we call the rent-a- judge system exists today. you have retired judges you can hire...
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Jul 10, 2013
07/13
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we are clearly in a rising interest rate environment in which he is trying to say let's price in higher rates at my pace. that's not usually the way it works. >> the impact on the way you're investing will be what forward and especially taking into consideration what he said this evening? >> we're looking at a rising interest rate in the next 1, 2, 3 years finally. we've been anticipating that but at the same time looking at a somewhat firm although low economy, firm with housing and autos, energy industry and perhaps that might pull in more manufacturing. we're looking at those two things and at the same time we're looking at a meade okayerly valued market. we're looking at things that can benefit from the rising interest rates. >> understanding your time frame is two, three years, cme group has had an unbelievable move over the last couple of months. it makes a lot of sense, right? >> yes. >> does that move scare you? that's a scare that rallied 20, 25% in the last month and a half. >> it's one of the stronger performers in the funds. we are pricing the outlook in the next one to thre
we are clearly in a rising interest rate environment in which he is trying to say let's price in higher rates at my pace. that's not usually the way it works. >> the impact on the way you're investing will be what forward and especially taking into consideration what he said this evening? >> we're looking at a rising interest rate in the next 1, 2, 3 years finally. we've been anticipating that but at the same time looking at a somewhat firm although low economy, firm with housing...
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Mar 29, 2013
03/13
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CSPAN2
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we came out of a regulated environment. we were deregulated in 1978, but the concept remains in our regulators. and we are subject to amazing amounts of regulation for deregulated business. i would like to say where the most heavily regulated to regulated business known to man. some regulations make sense. science-based safety regulations make sense, but many of them don't and many of them are very burdensome. we are required to produce. we oblations of people producing frames of data fed to our regulators. which is the data is not used or understood, that basically is a remnant of the old civil aeronautics board and the mentality needs to change. they need to think of this is a business and not regulated business. those are very expensive and the cost benefit analysis is simply not there. you take the tax burden and regulatory burden the fact that government uses as a business bank. they are $19 million out of the airlines every year and it's not being spent where it needs to be spent like on a modern air traffic control s
we came out of a regulated environment. we were deregulated in 1978, but the concept remains in our regulators. and we are subject to amazing amounts of regulation for deregulated business. i would like to say where the most heavily regulated to regulated business known to man. some regulations make sense. science-based safety regulations make sense, but many of them don't and many of them are very burdensome. we are required to produce. we oblations of people producing frames of data fed to...
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Feb 16, 2013
02/13
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FOXNEWS
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always go back to the 1930s when it seemed like all these wpa projects worked, but we had a different environment then. we didn't have public sector unions. we didn't have all these regulatory barriers. the problem is that the things that rick talks about are so much more expensive when administered by the government than they would be by the private sector. >> you got ten seconds, wrap it up. >> working today! it's 20 and. it's working now. it's -- >> no it's not. >> it's also working in flint, michigan, this exact program. it's bringing business in. doing all the things you like. >> we got to wrap it up at that. coming up, mountain dew. as your life and career change, fidelity is there for your personal economy, helping you readjust your retirement plan along the way. rethink how you're invested. and refocus as your career moves forward. wherever you are today, a fidelity ira has a wide range of investment choices to help you fine-tune your personal economy. call today and we'll make it easy to move that old 401(k) to a fidelity no-fee ira. >> we are back. mountain dew just releasing its breakf
always go back to the 1930s when it seemed like all these wpa projects worked, but we had a different environment then. we didn't have public sector unions. we didn't have all these regulatory barriers. the problem is that the things that rick talks about are so much more expensive when administered by the government than they would be by the private sector. >> you got ten seconds, wrap it up. >> working today! it's 20 and. it's working now. it's -- >> no it's not. >>...
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Mar 10, 2013
03/13
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CNNW
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we design buildings based on lead certifications, it's going to help the environment and everything is recycled. but we're not doing anything on health. the more important you are, the closer your parking space is to your desk. the more resources you have, the more bathrooms in your house, you don't have to walk place to place. 1953, they looked at the british transit authority. 26,000 workers. half were bus drivers and half were the ticket takers that walked up and down the double-decker buses. more than half the death rate of heart disease in the ticket takers and significantly less cancer. the weigh the same, they smoked the same. everything the same. just moving. your body was design dodd move. that's how your lymphatics work. we've engineered our society to sit. we need to change that. >> this becomes all of this becomes much more important because we're creating, you say a whole class of people that has never existed before. that is old people. all right. and these are all problems that are, that afflict people who are old. we all die in our 70s, now we're living into our 80s thi
we design buildings based on lead certifications, it's going to help the environment and everything is recycled. but we're not doing anything on health. the more important you are, the closer your parking space is to your desk. the more resources you have, the more bathrooms in your house, you don't have to walk place to place. 1953, they looked at the british transit authority. 26,000 workers. half were bus drivers and half were the ticket takers that walked up and down the double-decker...
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Sep 3, 2013
09/13
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MSNBCW
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trauma and the psychological damage and the worry about food and being in this really open field in the environment. the effort has been inadequate. >> we were talking about this before, but what is the sense among the people about this conflict? what is the sense of assad and whether he may be replaced and i have to ask this because we are talking about possible military intervention. what is the feeling about the united states and its role in the conflict and are they confident that help is on the way? >>. >> if there was one word i think best describes their reaction, you asked the question about their feelings about the united states, it would be disappointment. they have huge disappointment because this has been going on for more than two years. it's well into the third yore and they have been asking for protection. i am not talking about one side or the other. the assad regime or the rebels. the civilians have been asking for protection. this war had civilian casualties and the attacks that have affected children and women in a way that really would equal the definition of atrocity and with t
trauma and the psychological damage and the worry about food and being in this really open field in the environment. the effort has been inadequate. >> we were talking about this before, but what is the sense among the people about this conflict? what is the sense of assad and whether he may be replaced and i have to ask this because we are talking about possible military intervention. what is the feeling about the united states and its role in the conflict and are they confident that...
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Aug 29, 2013
08/13
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in order to manage what could be a very difficult, hopefully difficult inflationary organic growth environment. >> the fed is the buyer of last resort. have we focused enough on who is the buyer for last resort for stocks here. by the way, companies themselves, buy back trend has been such a strong one. when we could have bought this market. and i wonder how much further that has to pli out here. >> one of the things with are working on. we are doing m & a but what we are doing a lot of is buying back shares. that is helped by low rates. we can borrow in the market relatively cheaply and take that cash and put it to work. so when rates do begin to rise even more, that buy back theme might fade a bit but for now, we think that's a pretty good place to have core assets and large cap in that buy back theme. >> rick san tellry, i will come back to you for this reason. i know you are of like mind with jeffrey of tapering. either of you is a big fan, to say the least. and his argument, with what he says now, he feels the criteria the feds set up, do you agree? >> it is crisis style gdp levels, absol
in order to manage what could be a very difficult, hopefully difficult inflationary organic growth environment. >> the fed is the buyer of last resort. have we focused enough on who is the buyer for last resort for stocks here. by the way, companies themselves, buy back trend has been such a strong one. when we could have bought this market. and i wonder how much further that has to pli out here. >> one of the things with are working on. we are doing m & a but what we are doing...
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May 30, 2013
05/13
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KRCB
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. >> and a low-rate environment where people are looking for yield, these accounts give you the opportunity to earn a higher yield on a portion of your savings without sacrificing either the safety or the liquidity of the money. >> if you can stomach the requirements. high-yield checking accounts commonly require ten debit transactions a month to earn the highest rate, and they only let you earn the highest interest up to a certain balance. with yields continuing to fall, the costs may soon outweigh benefits. $280 earned was an average of $400 last year and experts say the numbers could keep going down since consumer interest rates lag the general market. financial planner derek kinney says consumers should be realistic. >> the biggest risk to a consumer is how much interest will they earn on the account? keep in mind cd rates are almost at an all-time low, savings rates aren't paying much more. consumers who are expecting too much may be very disapointed by what a high-yield checking or savings account pays. use this clearly for flexibility and liquidity. use the account as a way to save m
. >> and a low-rate environment where people are looking for yield, these accounts give you the opportunity to earn a higher yield on a portion of your savings without sacrificing either the safety or the liquidity of the money. >> if you can stomach the requirements. high-yield checking accounts commonly require ten debit transactions a month to earn the highest rate, and they only let you earn the highest interest up to a certain balance. with yields continuing to fall, the costs...
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Mar 3, 2013
03/13
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critics say tell damage the environment . now they are weighing in on a key environmental study that suggest that the pipe line may be alouped to go forward. peter dec has more from washington, peter? >> harris, the state department determined that tar sands is probably going to be developed whether the key stone pipe line is it built oir not. using a pipe line to export 830,000 barrels a day is not necessarily worse for the environment than the trucks and trains that could be used for an alternative. at this point the state department hasn't given the projects an up or down. >> it is important to deal with the comprehensive nature . document and look for the upon different issues that are raised. >> in a week. the perks aa will post and that will kick off a 45 day period that will give crude oil from texas to can dampt after four years of needless delays and it is time for president obama to stand up for. and that is it a commerce commit eye and democrat congressman dis, and said to stop climate change and the destructive st
critics say tell damage the environment . now they are weighing in on a key environmental study that suggest that the pipe line may be alouped to go forward. peter dec has more from washington, peter? >> harris, the state department determined that tar sands is probably going to be developed whether the key stone pipe line is it built oir not. using a pipe line to export 830,000 barrels a day is not necessarily worse for the environment than the trucks and trains that could be used for an...
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environment and created the problem of climate change while i'm if they're not if this is all we have time for thank you for taking time to talk to us and if you like the show please join i think and same place same time here on the pike. the. lives. of the young girls. all for the future harder. between two and three hundred million guns united states so you can act like they're not here and keep kids away from them. the plaza sound is a law or you know i mean this teaches them a lot of for a responsibility and simply come to pay through the eyes of children if we can't do it for our children alone for our future what is the country will save. right from the street. first street. and i were being put. on our reporter's twitter. and instagram. to be a month. on. more news today violence is once again flared up. these are the images the world has been seeing from the streets of canada. china operations are old today. default of virtue but only just president obama signs the congress bill to end the u.s. government shutdown but it only kicks the dead can down the road to february. the l
environment and created the problem of climate change while i'm if they're not if this is all we have time for thank you for taking time to talk to us and if you like the show please join i think and same place same time here on the pike. the. lives. of the young girls. all for the future harder. between two and three hundred million guns united states so you can act like they're not here and keep kids away from them. the plaza sound is a law or you know i mean this teaches them a lot of for a...
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in terms of advice, we look at this from my standpoint as being relatively cheap environment. i do know from a historical standpoint they may not be the absolute cheapest, but it is still an attractive rate environment. i see this as a good time to think about strategic moves. liz: one more question about the stock market. i whip out to see the bubble pop? >> i have no idea. if you look at a lot of the transactions that have occurred, they have beenghtful, valuatione careful. we are in an environment look at the interest rate level and look at earnings, the market appears to in effect caught up with the earnings of the company. i can't really sit there and say there is a bubble or not, but my own view is it is still on pace. there is a huge desire for people to go ahead and be invested the cubbie companies ae buying back the stock, and that is an innovation of the value. liz: the tapering issue, is there a taper survival guide? at some point it has to end. we talk about there being a shot clock that has to run out. begin to scale back. >> the balance sheet is large given all t
in terms of advice, we look at this from my standpoint as being relatively cheap environment. i do know from a historical standpoint they may not be the absolute cheapest, but it is still an attractive rate environment. i see this as a good time to think about strategic moves. liz: one more question about the stock market. i whip out to see the bubble pop? >> i have no idea. if you look at a lot of the transactions that have occurred, they have beenghtful, valuatione careful. we are in an...
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you can figure it will make it a lot tougher for the environment list perspective to stop. melissa: so what do you think happens from here? there has been a report before. >> this could easily get caught up in sequester policy. if there's any kind of movement on the negotiation and sequester, one of the things is okay, i will give you keystone excel pipeline in exchange for some other things, so it could become a bargaining chip in the other white house discussions. melissa: who do you think he means? they want to pipeline, the job, companies wanted, people who need energy want it. the only people fighting against it are environmentalists who don't even have the state department document. >> the conference was disrupted by a protester, i know that for the limitless vistas like the line in the sand, this is their biggest issue. they fill in a second term the obama administration is going to give them more of what they want and this is quite frankly the number one issue. it is not cap-and-trade, not a carbon tax, this is their biggest issue. they're looking at the obama admin
you can figure it will make it a lot tougher for the environment list perspective to stop. melissa: so what do you think happens from here? there has been a report before. >> this could easily get caught up in sequester policy. if there's any kind of movement on the negotiation and sequester, one of the things is okay, i will give you keystone excel pipeline in exchange for some other things, so it could become a bargaining chip in the other white house discussions. melissa: who do you...
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Sep 10, 2013
09/13
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CNBC
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you look at the ma crow economic environment. you don't see the growth there. that has got to be driving some people to be getting to the sidelines. >> just to touch on that, eem was unfairly sold off. i shouldn't say unfairly. it wasover sold. most recent highs i get we're looking back to may. but to touch on the other, people are looking for performance. 90% of all funds are probably trailing the index. so where are they going to get it from? not from disney or the generals. they will get it from wimpy stocks. >> ralph mentioned speculation. alpha could mean speculation, change for performance. >> it's a symbol of a topping process. i don't know if this is the absolute top but this is what you see when you see markets get disconnected. i would bring up big blue as another one to put out there. we have talked a lot in the show. they talked about how ibm tends to lead the market i sold all of my equity exposure. >> you're in all cash? >> 100% cash. >> so putting the bear suit to the test? >> i wouldn't go that far. but i bought emerging markets. i bought europe
you look at the ma crow economic environment. you don't see the growth there. that has got to be driving some people to be getting to the sidelines. >> just to touch on that, eem was unfairly sold off. i shouldn't say unfairly. it wasover sold. most recent highs i get we're looking back to may. but to touch on the other, people are looking for performance. 90% of all funds are probably trailing the index. so where are they going to get it from? not from disney or the generals. they will...
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Aug 19, 2013
08/13
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CNBC
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now people are forcing them to take care of the environment, it should raise costs is that something to be concerned about. >> it is. they have the mother of all environmental degradation and pollution problems. they tell us they're focused on it. i hear that every time i go there and i can't breathe when i go outside. you know they have to deal with it. this is a major source of civil protest, potential risk to social stability and it's not costless. they're leading the world though in terms of ramping up in alternative energies and i'm hopeful that they will begin to address this and the structural trance makes of their economy, moving from manufacturing to services where the carbon footprint is a sliver will be helpful in dealing with that problem. >> steven, thank you very much. quick story about steven. in 2005 do you remember this on my previous network we were talking about the housing market -- >> yeah. you were the last guy to refinance. >> no. we were talking about me buying a home. he said what kind of loan did you take out. i said a 30 year fixed rate. you looked right at
now people are forcing them to take care of the environment, it should raise costs is that something to be concerned about. >> it is. they have the mother of all environmental degradation and pollution problems. they tell us they're focused on it. i hear that every time i go there and i can't breathe when i go outside. you know they have to deal with it. this is a major source of civil protest, potential risk to social stability and it's not costless. they're leading the world though in...
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Aug 28, 2013
08/13
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CNBC
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this type of crisis, then there's no telling how far down the rupee and the sensex will go in this environment and i would be reluctant to say that, you know, the worst is over given the policy gridlock that is evident in india. >> thank you. >> stephen, good to talk to you. thanks so much. >> thank you, scott. >> steve roach. next up on "the half" which companies are leading today's rebound? believe it or not, two retailers are on a tear. we'll reveal the biggest movers next. [ male announcer ] i've seen incredible things. otherworldly things. but there are some things i've never seen before. this ge jet engine can understand 5,000 data samples per second. which is good for business. because planes use less fuel, spend less time on the ground and more time in the air. suddenly, faraway places don't seem so...far away. ♪ suddenly, faraway places don't seem so...far away. the world is changing faster than ever, creating new opportunities for those who stand ready to seize them. in a time when the biggest risk is playing it safe, we believe outshining the competition tomorrow requires challeng
this type of crisis, then there's no telling how far down the rupee and the sensex will go in this environment and i would be reluctant to say that, you know, the worst is over given the policy gridlock that is evident in india. >> thank you. >> stephen, good to talk to you. thanks so much. >> thank you, scott. >> steve roach. next up on "the half" which companies are leading today's rebound? believe it or not, two retailers are on a tear. we'll reveal the...
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74
Nov 23, 2013
11/13
by
KCSM
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eye 74
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perspective with the female violence in britain the offender could better be paid and take the safer environment for both staff and why certain people thinking it to be locked up for it today don't eat the bread water and don't laugh talk to you and that's not reality. no i mean ninety seven percent people are to get back out again to turn out better part they brought to an early strike. they are wrong. the second state to increase and. the most recent film loving that. insert these things to be straight line from last week is east of the creeks be spot on the fourteen thousand to rpi and nt scan. yet we get let out here. during the evening throughout the edict on anything yet. it's there for swimmers. how are they comfy i miss her a little over a month old. we raised him from pri. the material to hear this is maya. they died whether they connect. but the point. there somewhere like that. why did you hear tears. when clicking here they went the day before a grand time. netball will euthanize them all. sleep and it's evident to the kitchen the teachings about what to type it now detected a lot to
perspective with the female violence in britain the offender could better be paid and take the safer environment for both staff and why certain people thinking it to be locked up for it today don't eat the bread water and don't laugh talk to you and that's not reality. no i mean ninety seven percent people are to get back out again to turn out better part they brought to an early strike. they are wrong. the second state to increase and. the most recent film loving that. insert these things to...
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642
Apr 7, 2013
04/13
by
CNNW
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eye 642
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dliemtic stresses -- climatic stresses on the environment can lead to shortages of water and food which kwoud lead to anything from increased prices to disease. and all this, of course, can and does lead to protests. if there's one thing china's leaders fear most, it is wide-scale protests. thousands of local protests take place in china every year, most of which the state clamps down on. beijing can trace many of these protests to climate-related stress, pollution, water supplies, food production problems. so far they've never become larger challenges to central authority. of course, protests didn't grow larger in the arab world until in 2011, they did. perhaps china's leaders can be convinced to find ways of more sustainable growth. it may turn out to be a simple calculation, prevention is often cheaper than the cure. >>> up next, some good news for america, why a top investor says the era of the brick nations might be over. why it's time to be positive about the united states. right back. there's a reason no one says "easy like monday morning." sundays are the warrior's day to unplug
dliemtic stresses -- climatic stresses on the environment can lead to shortages of water and food which kwoud lead to anything from increased prices to disease. and all this, of course, can and does lead to protests. if there's one thing china's leaders fear most, it is wide-scale protests. thousands of local protests take place in china every year, most of which the state clamps down on. beijing can trace many of these protests to climate-related stress, pollution, water supplies, food...
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506
Apr 10, 2013
04/13
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CNBC
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>> the federal reserve has created an environment where rates are at rock-bottom earnings and corporate earnings -- >> but -- >> how about the fact that the corporate balance sheets are so strong, $3 trillion of cash on balance sheets. what about that? >> all i know is i never got as an operator of a company win never got recognized for cash in the bank. i only got recognized for increases in earnings. that's the measure of the stock market, not how much cash the company has. >> well, i have to say, sam zell telling me that this stock market feels like the housing market in 2006 is a scary comment. >> why? every single day, it goes up. every day in 2006, the housing market went up. what was the number one headline every day? housing prices going up. what are you talking about every day now? new high on the stock market every day. >> would you expect the kind of fall we saw in housing to occur in the stock market? >> number one, i'm not that smart to be -- >> i don't want you to be a predictor. >> i'm not that smart to be able to answer that question. but i just think that we are sufferi
>> the federal reserve has created an environment where rates are at rock-bottom earnings and corporate earnings -- >> but -- >> how about the fact that the corporate balance sheets are so strong, $3 trillion of cash on balance sheets. what about that? >> all i know is i never got as an operator of a company win never got recognized for cash in the bank. i only got recognized for increases in earnings. that's the measure of the stock market, not how much cash the company...
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67
May 29, 2013
05/13
by
CNBC
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they want to bring everybody together in a protected and encrypted environment. a lot of stuff you patch together for free. are we already overloaded with this stuff? a lot of good questions so why don't we get some answers. you heard some of our concerns. first off, how do you define yourself? are you a social media company? >> we're more a for fee service like ever note, life lock, like a lot of companies who deliver a service and expect to be paid for it. >> obviously there are a lot of issues with facebook. people worry that their data will be compromised. how is your company different? how do cyou keep it private? >> we sell services to individuals like you and we can guarantee you a level of privacy. if you don't like our service you go away. secondly we're talking about a place where you can put information about your child or information about your dad or your dad's bank passwords. we're built by security professionals to make sure we can give security that gives comfort that the information will be there when you want it. >> your two key numbers will be
they want to bring everybody together in a protected and encrypted environment. a lot of stuff you patch together for free. are we already overloaded with this stuff? a lot of good questions so why don't we get some answers. you heard some of our concerns. first off, how do you define yourself? are you a social media company? >> we're more a for fee service like ever note, life lock, like a lot of companies who deliver a service and expect to be paid for it. >> obviously there are a...
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42
Aug 27, 2013
08/13
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CNBC
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syria, adding to what was already a tough trading environment. today the dow is hitting a two-month low at one point earlier, the s&p at its lowest since july the 8th. the nasdaq was clinging onto the positive hat but with today's drop that is being knocked off. let's get straight to the trading floors. bob, it feels like the syrian situation is adding to an already fairly lengthy list of uncertainties out there. to what degree are we seeing the war trade being put on? >> we are. i think you're right, syria was sort of the tipping point that pushed us a little over. but we had already been heading in that direction. let me show you the list of uncertainties. when i said how much is esyria hurting things? yes, the timing of the fed tapering and u.s. debt ceiling expiration and bernanke's successor, we're reporting today there may be a new front-runner of that. berlusconi may bring the government down in the next few weeks and in the german elections, it's not clear who's going to be the winner. what's it worth? it's worth a little over 200 points.
syria, adding to what was already a tough trading environment. today the dow is hitting a two-month low at one point earlier, the s&p at its lowest since july the 8th. the nasdaq was clinging onto the positive hat but with today's drop that is being knocked off. let's get straight to the trading floors. bob, it feels like the syrian situation is adding to an already fairly lengthy list of uncertainties out there. to what degree are we seeing the war trade being put on? >> we are. i...
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63
Nov 26, 2013
11/13
by
KCSM
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these analysis preceded few goals included the chicken of technical their impact andicles and the environment and cds the colossal statistics shows that by twenty sixteen the kazakhstan costly it will have been made of almost eighty per cent of cars assembled more than twenty years ago using some european methods of functional obsolescence assessment of the car fleet at present about fifteen percent of cars require immediate recycling while the average level in europe is above forty seven per cent and in the cis countries. it stands at nine to eleven percent and present experts are talking about the need to start the development of the program for the disposal of cars on an industrial scale using the experience of european countries it said oracle assignment but her will to be diesel our sector which is necessary to develop in our country. i believe that we will be working on cc xi during the year twenty fourteen in this case a little place with a number of seriously she's hodges an increase in the fleet of new cars base and the number of recycled cards. ethan will result in the strengthening
these analysis preceded few goals included the chicken of technical their impact andicles and the environment and cds the colossal statistics shows that by twenty sixteen the kazakhstan costly it will have been made of almost eighty per cent of cars assembled more than twenty years ago using some european methods of functional obsolescence assessment of the car fleet at present about fifteen percent of cars require immediate recycling while the average level in europe is above forty seven per...